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Michelin profit hit by US slowdown, sees rebound in 2026

By Thomson Reuters Feb 11, 2026 | 10:53 AM

By Mathias de Rozario

Feb 11 (Reuters) – Michelin expects profit to rebound this year after a decline in 2025 caused by a slowdown in the U.S., the French tyre maker said ​on Wednesday.

The group forecast its segment operating income – the combined ‌profit from its Automotive and Two-wheel, Road Transportation and Specialties divisions – to be above 2025’s level in 2026.

Last year, segment operating income fell more than 14% to 2.9 billion euros ($3.4 billion), beating analysts’ 2.7-billion-euro forecast in a company-compiled consensus.

Sales fell ‌4.4% ​to 26 billion euros, also above the ⁠consensus estimate of 25.8 billion ⁠euros, with a 4.7% drop in tyre volumes less than the expected 4.9% decline.

“Overall, 80% of our decline in volume is due to original equipment, particularly B2B original equipment, meaning trucks. This is ​particularly pronounced in the United States and the agricultural sector,” Chief Financial Officer Yves Chapot told reporters.

The group already warned in its ⁠third-quarter results of a decline in ⁠the North American truck market after the postponement of ​U.S. vehicle emissions regulations and the impact of Chinese retaliatory measures on ​North American farmers’ incomes.

Chapot added that the expected drop in ‌sales volumes linked to the end of a contract with a major North American wholesaler on July 1 was fully behind the group by year-end.

North America is Michelin’s biggest market. While it produces tyres locally, ⁠avoiding a direct hit from U.S. tariffs, the company saw a knock-on impact from higher raw material prices and weaker car sales after automakers raised ⁠prices and customers ‌turned cautious.

The group recorded an impact of 230 million ⁠euros from U.S. tariffs on its 2025 costs ​and expects ‌around 120 million euros in 2026, Chapot said.

Michelin ​is maintaining ⁠its dividend at last year’s level of 1.38 euros per share, 10 cents above market expectations.

It also announced a 2.0-billion-euro share buyback programme for 2026-2028, supported by strong cash generation, Chapot said.

($1 = 0.8434 euros)

(Reporting by Mathias de Rozario in Gdansk. Additional reporting from Gilles Guillaume in Paris. Editing ​by Mark Potter)